the esotericism in sandro botticelli’s primavera. · 15 f. a. yates, giordano bruno y la...
TRANSCRIPT
THE ESOTERICISM IN SANDRO BOTTICELLI’S LA PRIMAVERA
© Esperanza Parra López.
Registered in the Spanish Register of Intellectual Property.
Register Number: 08/2011/549.
ABSTRACT:
This article proposes an iconographic and especially iconological interpretation about
the picture La Primavera (Allegory of Spring) by Sandro Botticelli. This fresh
interpretation has a strong esoteric component, characteristic of the period when it was
created, which has remained largely unnoticed. But the author of this research maintains
that in order to fully understand this picture, it is needed to penetrate the Italian
Renaissance Mentality.
KEYWORDS:
Marsilio Ficino – Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco of Medici – Lorenzo The Magnificent –
Simonetta Vespucci – Semiramide Appiani.
RESUMEN:
Se propone aquí, en el presente artículo, una interpretación iconográfica y sobre todo
iconológica totalmente nueva y definitiva sobre el cuadro La Primavera de Sandro
Botticelli. Esta novedosa interpretación tiene un fuerte componente esotérico, propio de
la época en la cual se realizó esta obra de arte, que, muchas veces, ha pasado totalmente
desapercibido. Pero la autora de esta investigación, insiste, en que hay que penetrar en
la mentalidad del Renacimiento Italiano y sus escritos para comprender la totalidad de
dicho cuadro.
2
THE ESOTERICISM IN SANDRO BOTTICELLI’S LA PRIMAVERA
© Esperanza Parra López. Registered in the Spanish Register of Intellectual
Property. Register Number: 08/2011/549.
Botticelli: La Primavera. Florence, ©Uffizi. (fig. 1)
PREFACE:
This essay begins with a short review of what has been written until now about
Botticelli’s La Primavera. Later, the main part of the essay is presented. The purpose of
this research is not to compile what has been said before, but to bring new information
3
that can help to envisage the iconographic, and above all, iconological interpretation of
this artwork.
Aby Warburg and Poliziano’s stanze:
Aby Warburg’s thesis of 18931, called Birth of Venus and Allegory of Spring,
it’s based on the stanze, that is a poem by Poliziano2.
Allegory of Spring as a depiction of the Giostra:
By Marrai and Supino. The Giostra is a tournament in which Giuliano dei
Medici took part and where, apparently, he and Simonetta Vespucci (whose
maiden name was Cattaneo) fell in love3.
It is also said that Botticelli was in love with Simonetta, who died in 1476 from
tuberculosis at the age of 23, loss that was mourned by Lorenzo the Magnificent
and his circle in many verses4.
However, Horne and Mesnil affirm that there is no evidence that Botticelli
painted the young Simonetta, Marco Vespucci’s wife5.
Many authors have seen Simonetta in almost all Botticelli’s female beauties.
The first to support this claim was A. F. Rio and after him and endless series of
researchers6. I don’t confirm neither deny such claim. I just say that the woman
in Allegory of Spring is not Simonetta. We will see that in the main part of this
essay.
Simonetta’s awakening at the Elysium by E. Jacobsen.
The marriage of the satire Menipo with Mercury by E. Wickhoff.
1 E. H. Gombrich, Imágenes Simbólicas, Madrid, Alianza Editorial, 1983, p. 69. 2 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. (note 15), p. 300. 3 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. p. 69. 4 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. p. 69. 5 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. p. 70. 6 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. (note 17) p. 301.
4
The mistery of feminity by W. Uhde7.
Those are some of the many titles that have been given to this picture.
For E. H. Gombrich it is based on Golden Donkey by Apuleyo8. A text with
esoteric traces, but Gombrich provides a completely philosophic explanation for
this picture. He believes the central figure is Venus Humanitas (Venus
Humanity, love towards humankind, to be human), interpreting a letter from
Marsilio Ficino to Pierfrancesco of Medici; Gombrich explains that the teenager
had to be taught Human Virtue and for that purpose the picture was created9. I
am not of the same opinion, as I have interpreted the letter in a different way.
Gombrich, like Warburg, also believes that the two figures at the right part are
Zephyrus chasing Flora.
Erwin Panofsky, on his book Renaissance and Renascences in Western Art, also
reflects that the Giostra it’s the answer to this picture, likewise the pastoral
Rusticus. Also backs Gombrich’s interpretation10.
MY INTERPRETATION:
Allegory of Spring by Alessandro Filipepi nicknamed Botticelli, made by the artist
between 1477 and 1482. (Figure 1).
In 1499 it was among Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco of Medici’s properties, according to an
inventory discovered in 1976, and was placed on a wall over a divan in hall leading to
7 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. pp. 70-71. 8 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. p. 77. 9 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. pp. 72-77. 10 E. Panofsky, Renacimiento y renacimientos en el arte occidental, Madrid, Alianza Editorial, 1988, pp. 281-284.
5
Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco’s private rooms, at his home at the city of Florence. Later it
was moved, according to Vasari, to the Villa di Castello11. So, it was initially in a
private place so it could not be seen by people or guests, it was a picture for private use.
But who was Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco of Medici? He was born on August 4th, 1463 and
died on May 20th, 1503. He was a young cousin of Lorenzo the Magnificent. His father
died when he was 13 and Lorenzo the Magnificent became his tutor. He was nicknamed
Il Popolano (The Populist) and had ups and downs with his cousin.
Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco of Medici was married in 1482 (date when Allegory of Spring
is finished), with Semiramide Appiani, born in Piombino, a coastal area of the Toscana,
in 1464 and died in Florence on March 9th, 1523. Semiramide was the niece of famous
Simonetta Vespucci, and that marriage had full consent from Lorenzo the Magnificent.
The Appiani family was allied with Lorenzo the Magnificent and owned what by then
were the only iron mines of the island of Elba. Semiramide Appiani was the daughter of
Jacobo III, the lord of Piombino.
In 1477, date when this picture was started, it has passed a year since beautiful
Simonetta had died and I believe this work was made to teach ficinian magic to
Semiramide Appiani. Why? Based on the same letter that Gombrich used for his
interpretation. Gombrich says that this letter is rare. I believe that if one knows Ficino
well enough, this letter is not rare but logical: it is a letter from Marsilio Ficino to the
young Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco of Medici in 1477, when he was about 15 years old:
My immense love towards you, excellent Lorenzo, has moved me since long ago
to give you a gift. (…) Astrologers say that the happiest man is the one for who
Destiny has placed celestial signs in a way that the Moon is not in bad aspect
with Mars and with Saturn, and on the contrary is in favourable aspect with the
11 http://es.wikipedia.org
6
Sun, Jupiter, Mercury and Venus (we shall remember those for planets Sun,
Jupiter, Mercury and Venus). And like astrologers call happy the man for who
Destiny has organized the celestial bodies in that way, the theologians judge
joyful who has organized his own self in a similar way. Maybe you ask yourself
if that’s not asking too much: it certainly is a lot, but, my intelligent Lorenzo,
start this task with excitement, because the one who created you is greater than
heavens, and you will also be greater than heavens as soon as you decide to look
at them face to face. We don’t have to look for those things out of us, as all the
heavens are in our interior and the forceful energy we carry inside us proves our
celestial origin. (…) Last, you must put your eyes upon Venus herself, that is,
upon Humanity. (…) Be then careful, as you shall no disregard her thinking
maybe that humanitas is of earthly origin. (…) As Humanity (humanitas) herself
is a nymph of excellent graciousness, born from the heavens and loved more
than the others by God almighty. Her soul and her mind are the Love and the
Charity, her eyes the Dignity and Magnanimity, her hands Liberality and
Magnificence, her foot Charm and Modesty. The group is, then, Temperance and
Rectitude, Charm and Splendour. Oh, what a refined beauty! How lovely to see
her! My dear Lorenzo, a nymph of such nobility has been placed at your hands.
If you joined her in marriage and declared her yours, she would sweeten your
whole life and make you father of beautiful children12.
Gombrich says that it’s the Venus Humanitas the virtue that Lorenzo most empower,
and that the children mentioned, are Venus children13, like Saturn children, that one as
much as the others, have the properties of the planets. I say that when he talks about
12 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. pp. 73- 74. 13 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. p. 74.
7
wife and children, he is not referring to a philosophical concept, but to Semiramide
Appiani, that’s the gift the Ficino wants to make to the teenager. And when he warns
not to disregard her because of her earthly origin, it’s because at Lorenzo’s Circle they
got initiated in ficinian magic since a very early age, as the letter written using an
astrological and magical language shows, and Semiramide was not initiated in that.
There is another letter, also from the same period, from Ficino to Lorenzo the
Magnificent and Bernardo Bembo and says in a paragraph:
“It’s worthless to praise a girl in front of a boy, or describe her to him with words if
what we try is to awake his love towards her… Point the finger, is possible, to the pretty
maiden, and no more words will be needed”14.
We do not know if Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco finally fell in love with her or not, if he
met her before the wedding, which I think happened because of Piombino’s proximity.
We do not know if he fell in love with her, but what he did say was that she was
“earthly” and he did not like that about her. Perhaps that was the reason because
Semiramide was initiated in the ficinian magic, so Lorenzo could fell in love with her,
or perhaps they initiated her because she was about to become part of Lorenzo the
Magnificent’s Circle, circle that was ultimately magic. Let’s see:
According to Frances A. Yates in his book Giordano Bruno and the hermetic tradition,
in the chapter `Ficino’s Natural Magic´, he says, first of all, that it is a magic picture, he
does not want to go deeper in its interpretation, he does not interpret the picture, but he
contributes that the image on the right, normally assigned to Zephyrus, is in fact the
Spiritus Mundi, that is a channel through which the stellar influences are spread15. And
yes, I believe that it is a completely magical picture, according to Ficino’s magic.
14 E. H. Gombrich, ibid. p.76. 15 F. A. Yates, Giordano Bruno y la tradición hermética, Barcelona, Ariel Filosofía, 1983, p. 97.
8
First of all we observe that it is set on an orange tree forest because it is said that those
trees are attributed to Medici’s family and yes, it’s possible, but we have to consider the
magical properties of the orange tree, it’s a plant not from Venus, but from Sun, and
provides a peaceful environment and amplifies magic powers, so we have the perfect
environment for what is going to happen in this picture. Also, the orange trees are in
flower, the orange blossom that, as a magical virtues, favours marriages, provides love,
peace of spirit and attracts loved ones; it is also associated to brides’ purity, invests joy
and causes dreams that set the emotional tensions of the subconscious free. It is very
useful for meditation.
All this happens because, as Ficino demonstrates in his third book De Vita, called De
Vita coelitus comparanda, he was an expert on the magical properties of the rocks and
the herbs as each planet confers specific virtues to the plants and to the rocks. But,
above all, he emphasizes the fact that there exist two kinds of magic, a demonic magic,
that is illicit and perverse, and a natural magic, useful and necessary. The only kind of
magic that he had practiced and advised was the good and useful, the magia naturalis16.
This picture is pure ficinian magic and we are going to see why, as Yates say: `Ficino
avoids Saturn. Allegory of Spring is a talisman essentially Venusian from Botticelli that
reflect the mafic of ficinian type ´17. And she does not go any deeper. Let’s see my
interpretation:
16 F. A. Yates, ibid. p. 100. 17 F. A. Yates, ibid. p. 174.
9
We start on the right, the Spiritus Mundi which is a channel
through which the stellar influences are spread, it’s about to
catch Semiramide, who throws roses out of her mouth (figure
2), the rose inspires feelings of peace and happiness, it’s the
emblem of love, here is spiritual love and increases
clairvoyance, this means that Semiramide speaks of spiritual
love and already transmits peace and happiness, and thanks to
that way of living her clairvoyance has already been increased
because as the Corpus Hermeticum says in the `Secret speech of
Hermes Trismegistus to his son Tat at the Mountain´ that Ficino
translated:
Tat asks his father Trismegistus to teach him the regeneration doctrine, as he has
already fortified his spirit against the several illusions of the world (like Semiramide has
already done) and he is ready for the final initiation. Trismegistus tells him that the
regenerated man is the silent fruit of the intelligent wisdom and that the seed is the true
Good placed in him by the will of God. The man who is born in that way will be a new
god, son of God, in everything and for everything, fitted with all the Power18.
So, the man or woman who is born in that way will be a new god. And is seed of good,
which is why Semiramide throws roses out of her mouth because as the Pimander says,
she is seed of the good in her life.
But continuing with the picture, above the Spiritus Mundi and Semiramide there is a
laurel, plant from the Sun, not from Venus, whose magical properties are to purify and
open the psychic conscience and also makes new beginning more accessible (like
Semiramide who is beginning her initiation in Ficino’s magic), it was used by Apollo
18 F. A. Yates, ibid. p. 46.
Botticelli: La Primavera.
Detail. Florence, ©Uffizi.
(fig. 2).
10
priestess to magically induce the prophetic visions. The Spiritus Mundi arrives
unexpected because living the life she lives and using the laurel, the Spiritus Mundi will
arrive unexpected; I mention an example to make it more easily understandable: it’s like
when we ask a researcher who made an important discovery how he reached that result,
and he answers `It came unexpected´ or `I had a brilliant idea´, it’s because, when we
are working continuously on something for a long time, we are continually in contact
with that subject, and we reach a point in which the answer comes unexpected. That’s
what happened to Semiramide with her continued chaste and pure life. On the ground
and the grass there are also roses.
Then there is Flora (figure 3), who is not Simonetta Cattaneo, neither Semiramide, Flora
will bring many things in this initiation journey to Semiramide: All the flowers that
carries have magical properties that will be conferred to Semiramide:
- Violets: increase the clairvoyance and the positive spiritual energy.
- Cornflower: grants prophetic dreams and bolsters psychic powers and
clairvoyance.
- Strawberry: tames and sweetens people. Gets friendships.
- Rose: inspires feelings of peace and happiness. Helps us to feel well in our body
by removing any doubts about our appearance and looks. Refreshes the brain.
Contributes caution and good judgement. Love’s emblem. Increases clairvoyance.
- Hyacinth: it’s a flower from Venus.
11
- Iris or fleur-de-lis: a Venus flower. In times of the Ancient Rome it was used for
purification. It is said that Greeks allowed chaste people to collect them, only to
perform magic ceremonies.
- Spray-carnations: it is not a Venus
plant, but a Sun plant. It has magical
properties.
- Mayflower: plant from Mars and
Venus. Invests bravery, strength and desire.
Protects the garden and the home. Brings the
true magic to home. Contributes health
protection and healing.
- Forget-me-not and houseleek, I have
not found information about them.
Flora contributes all this to Semiramide.
Botticelli: La Primavera. Detail. Florence, ©Uffizi.
(fig. 3).
12
Let’s see now the figure in the centre (figure 4), who I affirm is Semiramide Appiani19,
but I don’t think that she is portrayed as the goddess Venus. I propose the following
explanation:
It is Semiramide, after having obtained all the properties gifted by Flora. Also, on the
grass, we can see the Mayflowers that we remember bring us the true magic.
Semiramide appears prevailing, beautiful, self-confident, after having received all those
virtues through Ficino’s magic, exalted by a myrtle, a Venus plant, that brings great
personal attraction and success, she is watching, but she is not looking at us, she is
looking at herself, because this picture was intended for her, it was for her to
contemplate, I repeat, she is looking at herself after her magical transformation, yes,
19 Sergiusz Michalski in his article ‘Venus as Semiramis: A New Interpretation of the Central Figure of Botticelli´s Primavera’ (www. Jstor.org/stable/1483740?seq=3), says that the figure in the center is Semiramide Appiani, but he does not go any further in the interpretation of this picture.
Botticelli: La Primavera. Detail. Florence, ©Uffizi. (fig. 4).
13
magical transformation; because as Marsilio Ficino says in De Vita Coelitus
Comparanda, third book of the De Vita:
“It is known by experience that if one operates the elaboration in the proper ways and is
able to endure it, mutates in some way, after the rare purification and its hidden
property, the spirit’s own quality, the body’s nature and partly the mood’s movement,
and almost regains the youth, in a way that seems to rebirth: and from here origins the
tradition of Medea and the magicians often restoring, using particular herbs, that
youth…”20.
So Semiramide has been reborn, she is in a new spiritual conscience, ready to learn the
great cosmos mysteries, as Frances A. Yates declares in the book Giordano Bruno and
the hermetic tradition in the chapter `Renaissance Magic and Science´, it says: `The
Renaissance Magic as a factor responsible of fundamental changes in the human
conception about the cosmos´21. Now, Semiramide, calm and revived, shows us her
right hand, another spectacle, but before, above her, we have the Divinus Cupido, not
Cupid, no (figure 5). The Divinus Cupido is the Divine Love that has filled the Sacred
Place, as is manifested in a passage of the Asclepius,
esoteric work translated by Ficino, when Hermes
Trismegistus, Asclepius, Tat and Ammon gather
together in an Egyptian temple22. And the Divinus
Cupido points with his arrow’s fire to one of the Three Graces, we will see why later.
20 M. Ficino, De Vita, Pordenone, Edizioni Biblioteca dell’Immagine, 1991, pp. 357-358. 21 F. A. Yates, ibid. p. 184. 22 F. A. Yates, ibid. p. 53.
Botticelli: La Primavera. Detail.
Florence, ©Uffizi. (fig. 5).
14
Now we move to the Three Graces (figure 6) who I affirm are Ficino’s Three Graces,
that is the planets Jupiter, Venus and the Sun, it is affirmed by Marsilio Ficino on the
third book of the De Vita, fifth chapter titled: `The Three Graces are Jupiter, the Sun and
Venus; and Jupiter it’s the Grace between the other two, and is specially suitable to us
´23. Ficino’s Three Graces are antidepressant for the authors and the scholars, and in that
case it could be a studious Semiramide; they are also antidepressant for the melancholic
moods, it is also possible that Semiramide had a gloomy mood, typical from geniuses
during the Renaissance, as Ficino says in the chapter I just named:
23 M. Ficino, ibid. p. 233.
Botticelli: La Primavera. Detail. Florence, ©Uffizi. (fig. 6).
15
“If we devote ourselves primarily to Venus, we won’t have the favour of the Sun
anymore; if the Sun, Venus will leave. Therefore, to embrace the three graces
simultaneously we need to resort to Jupiter, able to communicate”24.
That’s why I say that the Grace on the left is the Sun, the one on the middle (like
connecting the other two) is Jupiter, and the one on the right is Venus. Also Ficino says
“Like in the Sun series, the inferior man admires the superior, in the Jupiter series, he
adores it; in the Venus series the inferior is raised to the superior with loving zeal (that’s
why the Divinus Cupido points to Venus with his arrow) and is transferred to the
other”25. Also, (figure 6) Venus is also, because of the pearls she wears on her hair and
the ruby hanging around her neck that points her love to Mars and it’s typical of the
Three Graces26. Venus and the Sun are also, in a shameless and refined way, praising
the female sex, like praising the woman above Jupiter’s head, the great communicator,
like exalting the woman, and in second place, his role as communicator. It is not the
first time that the Art, through gestures, talks or manifests the male or female sex, or
even the coitus, as I remember in a Lucrezia Borgia’s picture from Pinturicchio.
24 M. Ficino, ibid. pp. 233- 234. 25 M. Ficino, ibid. p. 236. 26 M. Ficino, ibid. p. 285.
16
Last, we have Hermes/Mercury (figure 7), who
has Ficino says, is together with the Moon,
messenger for the Three Graces27, and on the
context of Mercury the inferior always learns
from the superior and consents to be persuaded
by it 28. So Hermes/Mercury clears with his
caduceus the clouds of ignorance, (figure 7) so
we can see the Eternal Wisdom. This picture is
a talisman, Hermes/Mercury will show the
secrets of the Pimander after witnessing the
harmonic dance of the three planets, the Three
Graces.
Indeed, Mercury will make you feel and
discover in your own spirit, once the clouds
are cleared, what the Corpus Hermeticum
says, remembering that it was translated by Ficino: `The intellect, or Tat, originates
from God’s essence itself. In the men, that intellect is God, and that’s the reason some
of them are gods and their humanity is so close to divinity´29.
So, if you do not become like God, you will not be able to understand him, because
each thing it’s only understandable by another which is similar to it. Raise yourself to
reach a greatness above any measure, free yourself from your body, go beyond any
time, become Eternity and then you will understand God. Convince yourself that
nothing is impossible for you, think you are immortal and you are in position to
27 M. Ficino, ibid. p. 233. 28 M. Ficino, ibid. p. 300. 29 F. A. Yates, ibid. p. 51.
Botticelli: La Primavera. Detail. Florence,
©Uffizi. (fig. 7).
17
understand everything, all the arts, all the sciences, the nature of every living thing.
Raise until placing yourself above the highest peak, go down lower than the most
abyssal depth. Experience in your interior all the feelings of what has been created, of
the fire and the water, the wet and the dry, imagining you are everywhere, over the land,
in the sea, in the sky. Imagine you have not been born yet, that you are inside the womb,
that you are a teenager, that you are old, dead, beyond death. If you manage to embrace
with your thought all the things as a whole, times, spaces, substances, qualities, and
quantities, you will be able to understand God30.
That’s what this picture pretends.
This artwork has a magical power since the beginning, since the wood that forms it, as
we know is tempera on panel. Why is this way? As is expressed in the chapter sixteen
of the Third book of Ficino’s De Vita, titled; `Heaven power and the energy of the ray
from which it is known that the images bring the strength´: And it says:
“That’s why doctors demand images to be made not with any metal or wood, but with a
particular one, to which the heavenly nature has naturally provided the virtues that serve
to the precious purpose, as if it had matured already. So the art excites the virtue,
present in the seed”31.
Also mention that in the same book, Marsilio Ficino says that:
“The planets rays (as the astrologers say) can imprint on the images, like they do on
other things, powers hidden and extraordinary, different to those who are known. They
are not private facts of the soul, they are alive and gifted with sense and have maximum
30 F. A. Yates, ibid. p. 50. 31 M. Ficino, ibid. p. 323.
18
effectiveness over the spirit. They are then diverse energies according to each star and
their rays also change depending on the planet or star”32.
A lot has been said about the light that this picture, Botticelli’s Allegory of Spring, has.
It is a dim and celestial light that I think represents the rays from the three planets (The
Three Graces) that take part in this artwork.
But how acts this image, this picture? How do we act in front of it? Or rather, what did
Semiramide Appiani do in front of that magical picture? According to Ficino:
It’s an Arab tradition that, when images are made according to the ritual, our
spirit completely immersed in the artwork and in the stars through imagination
and emotion, joins with the spirit of the world itself and with the astral radiations
that move the spirit of the world; that union causes the spirit of the world to pour
any star spirit over the image, that is a vivifying virtue, the one that is specially
harmonized with the spirit of the artwork’s (the ritual) author. And an artwork
done and provided with essences or perfumes that influence the air, the rays, the
operator’s spirit, the material from which the image is made. And I say that
perfumes, because of their own nature so close to the spirit and the air, and when
they are thrown to the fire, common to the star rays, if they are solar or youthful,
effectively influence the air and the spirit, to timely acquire, under the rays, the
virtues of the Sun of Jupiter then dominating; and the spirit influenced and
enriched with those gifts can, thanks to a passion more than impetuous, not only
intervene its own body, but also effect similar qualities over a near body,
especially if it’s of a weaker nature. About the material, specially hard, that the
image is made of, I affirm that it hardly can have any effect, even a small one,
32 M. Ficino, ibid. pp. 319, 321.
19
from the perfumes or the imagination of the ritual performer; but, regarding the
spirit, it is so influenced by the perfume, that becomes one with it33.
So, Semiramide Appiani placed herself in front of the picture, burned some essences
from plants or flowers, perhaps ingest some of those plants or several of them in an
infusion or potion and performed the ritual according to what Marsilio Ficino tells us
that was made with the images. We know that according to the 1499 inventory of
Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco of Medici’s properties this picture was in the hall of the
private rooms of Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco, that is, the couple’s private rooms. As we
can see it was a private picture of Semiramide.
We have to remember that it was not rare, we are in Marsilio Ficino’s circle and in Pico
della Mirandola’s circle. Pico della Mirandola was an expert in Cabalistic Magic and
it’s known that both Pico and Ficino practised the magic. Why not Lorenzo the
Magnificent, who many times saved Pico from his problems with the Church? Why not
everybody surrounding them? Including Simonetta, including, of course, Semiramide,
we know that during the Renaissance, the figure of the woman is also revived. As Franz
Cumont says in his conferences of 1905 in Paris about Les réligions orientales dans le
paganisme romain:
“Astrology’s religious character, always maintained, at the expenses of logic, because
planets and constellations were not only cosmic forces whose influence benign or
malefic weakens or reinforces depending on the revolutions of an itinerary fixed since
forever; they were also divinities who observed and understood, who became happy or
grieved, who had voice and sex, who were fertile or sterile, placid or savage, giving or
dominating”34.
33 M. Ficino, ibid. p. 361. 34 E. Garin, El Zodíaco de la vida, Barcelona, Ediciones Península, 1981, pp. 9- 10.
20
Also add, as Eugenio Garin contributes:
“It was the Neoplatonic tradition in general what revived with strength among the Greek
Fathers, even in their most reckless manifestations, in a recovery of Hellenism that
sometimes was disconcerting. It was not only about a greater knowledge and comments
made by Aristotle through a return to the vigour and rigour of the origins, not even a
simple integration between Aristotelianism and Platonism and more complete contact
with the Arab richness of thought. There was above all a rediscovery of the Hellenic
epoch, when in the Greek culture had converged oriental contributions of all kind.
Precisely in that environment we witness the singular encounter between the magical-
astrological doctrines of the Latin Middle Ages, in which the ancient legacy had
penetrated through the Islamic world, and the Hellenic positions, reencountered in the
Greek sources”35.
In 1439 the Council for the unification of the churches moved from Ferrara to Florence
and that was very important, because George Gemisto Pleton, restorer in Mistra of the
cult to the pagan gods, announced, talking to the Florentines themselves, the near end of
the Hebraism, Christianity and Islamism, because all the men and women would
convert to the religion of the truth, the Gentile’s religion36, it seems as if George
Gemisto Pleton announced the truth of Marisilio Ficino, his religion that was so
particular, that united Magic, Astrology, Paganism and Christianity. We shall remember
that:
“The hermetic texts will be a point of constant reference for Ficino, a privileged
testimonial of the prisca theologia, a remarkable document that exposes arcana
misteria, worthy of being placed by Lactantius between the Sibyls and the Prophets
35 E. Garin, ibid. p. 86. 36 E. Garin, ibid. p. 87.
21
(inter Sybillas et Prophetas). However: precisely that perspective found confirmation
and metaphysical and theological foundation of the astrology and the magic. Not
without reason has observed Frances Yates that the third book of De Vita, full of magic,
is more a large exegesis of Hermes (from the Asclepius) than a comment of Plotinus.
The affirmation can be widely understood: Ficino will do no other thing than to evocate
and retake the Trismegistus again and again”37.
Eugenio Garin also contributes something really crucial in my opinion: `The world as
an artwork could be the title of all Ficino’s philosophy; the world figurative, animated,
live of the astrologers and wizards´38. `It’s in this universal harmony where Ficino
justifies the astrology, and the magic too, as consonance of the whole´39. Now I am
going to quote some Garin’s words, because if I am quoting him, is because I want to
show in this current research, that I base myself on recognised researchers of prestige to
reach my interpretation and conclusion: Talking about Ficino, Garin says:
“It’s not enough to construct the perfect archetype of the world, neither to just observe
it; it is also needed to interiorize it through intense meditation and the contemplation of
its painted image at home where we live. The man-microcosm, so, has to adapt to the
macrocosm with the technique of the images, tune in and perform the perfect harmony,
identifying himself with the life of the whole and with the power of the whole. Art and
magic get together…”40.
This that Garin says about what Marsilio Ficino thought, matches exactly the
interpretation that I have given to Botticelli’s Allegory of Spring, when I say that
Semiramide Appiani interiorized her picture and meditated with it, in addition to
performing the magic ritual; Ficino comments that is important to have the magical 37 E. Garin, ibid. p. 95. 38 E. Garin, ibid. p. 107. 39 E. Garin, ibid. p. 107. 40 E. Garin, ibid. p. 108.
22
image at home, like Semiramide had it at her home in Florence, at the hall of her private
rooms, above the divan. When Garin says that the man had to perform the perfect
harmony, art and magic get together, he was clearly talking about the magic ritual that
Ficino describes in De Vita.
On the other hand, the society of that time, lived daily with the astrology, as Marsilio
Ficino observes in his De Vita, in the chapter XXV titled: `The observation of the stars
for the conception of children, in cooking, in building and room caring, in assembling
the wardrobe; and to the point that it’s licit to pay attention to those things´41; in that
chapter Ficino ardently defends the use of the stars for such matters, because he say it’s
following Nature’s pace. I will quote just the dressing example, to make it they resorted
to Venus, and also the planet Venus had to be favourable when the dress was worn for
the first time. What was achieved with that? That the dress, every time is worn,
contributes joy to the body and the soul. And people did this in the times of Botticelli’s
Allegory of Spring. As can be seen, my interpretation it’s completely integrated in the
times of that artwork, as I believe that should be: Not seeing a picture from our times,
from the 21st century, but entering the thought and lifestyle of the times that our artwork
is about. As Garin says in one of his books:
“The images, like the rest of nature itself, have a soul, a meaning; stopping at the
fantastic image, like limiting ourselves to a pure physical conception of nature, and not
descending to the deepest spiritual direction, to the artist (human or divine it doesn’t
matter, because the only artist is the Logos) intention; to remain at the surface, it’s the
biggest mistake”42.
Erwin Panofsky also tells us regarding Marsilio Ficino’s thought:
41 M. Ficino, ibid. p. 401. 42 E. Garin, L´umanesimo italiano, Bari, Editori Laterza, 1978, p. 110.
23
“It is also understood that (leaving aside necromancy and demonism) there is not, in
principle, difference between the medicine, the magic and the astrology. When I devote
myself to a particular activity or behave in a particular way, when I go for a walk at a
particular time, when I play or listen to a particular piece of music, when I eat a
particular food, smell a particular perfume or take a particular medicine, I am doing
essentially the same that when I wear and amulet manufactured under favourable
conditions, of a particular substance and with the image or symbol of a particular planet
or constellation: In all those cases I am exposing myself to the influence of the cosmic
spirit modified by the spheres and elements it has passed through. Because if the
medicine prescribed by a doctor contains, for example, mint, this humble plant has
acquired its healing properties thanks to having accumulated the spirit of the Sun
combined with the spirit of Jupiter”43.
43 E. Panofsky, Renacimiento y renacimientos en el arte occidental, Madrid, Alianza Editorial, 1988, p. 267.
24
CONCLUSION:
According to both letters from Ficino, one to Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco of Medici and
the other to Lorenzo the Magnificent and Bembo, it clearly refers to Semiramide when
Gombrich thinks that is pure Ficinian philosophy. I think that he talks about
Semiramide so Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco of Medici falls in love with her, but he thought
that she was earthly, that she was not initiated in the Ficinian magic that his master
Marsilio had taught him all his life, for this reason the picture of Allegory of Spring is
made, so Semiramide can be initiated in what everybody else was already initiated in
the circle of Lorenzo the Magnificent, that’s the reason because the picture is started
during the times of those letters and gets finished for the wedding. Although it’s
possible that Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco saw her and fell in love with her, or maybe not,
that we do not know, we do not know his feelings, but we know that this picture had the
purpose of initiating Semiramide in the Ficinian magic so Lorenzo of Pierfrancesco
could fall in love with her even more and also she could be integrated in the circle of
Lorenzo the Magnificent, that is where her life was going to take place. To end this
conclusion I would like to quote some Marsilio Ficino’s words from the De vita,
collected in Saturn and the Melancholy:
Always remember that because of our mind wishes and inclinations and because
of the ability of our spiritus we can easily and quickly enter under the influence
of those stars that express those inclinations, wises and abilities; so, by moving
away from the earthly things, by the leisure, the solitude, the persistence, the
theology, and the esoteric philosophy, by the superstition, the magic, the
agriculture and the pain we enter under Saturn’s influence44.
44 R. Klibansky; E. Panofsky; F. Saxl, Saturno y la Melancolía, Madrid, Alianza Forma, 2004, p. 256.
25
The one who writes those lines about Botticelli’s Allegory of Spring is also daughter of
Saturn.
© Esperanza Parra López.